How To Use Innate In A Sentence

  • The bieing innate of a battery based upon peoples entrance to fast as well as postulated for benefaction needs. Archive 2009-12-01
  • Knowing the innate power of the press, he bought a mimeograph machine.
  • Let us adopt then words sanctioned by usage, and give the distinction between intelligence and instinct this more precise formula: _Intelligence, in so far as it is innate, is the knowledge of a_ form; _instinct implies the knowledge of a_ matter. Evolution créatrice. English
  • Success has come so naturally that the young Italian exudes an innate, unquestioned belief in his own talents.
  • I also saw a large tree and obtained specimens of it, belonging to the natural order BIGNONIACEAE, with terminal spikes of yellow flowers, and rough cordate leaves; and a proteaceous plant with long compound racemes of white flowers, and deeply cut leaves, resembling a tree with true pinnate leaves. Narrative of an expedition undertaken for the exploration of the country lying between Rockingham Bay and Cape York
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  • The genus Prionospio Malmgren 1867 includes species with smooth, non-pinnate and pinnate branchiae arranged in various combinations.
  • Whether or not you're a logomaniac (one obsessed with words), this esoteric collection of English words should prove entertaining; it even might make you cachinnate (laugh loudly) as you turn the pages.
  • -- A tree, with leaves bunched at the extremities of the branches, oblong, oval, acuminate, odd-pinnate, 3-4 pairs of opposite leaflets. The Medicinal Plants of the Philippines
  • The top selling non-fiction book Blink is coining mucho bling for Malcolm Gladwell, yet in 1997 Gladwell wrote a New Yorker article called "The Sports Taboo: Why blacks are like boys and whites are like girls," which made exactly the same argument as Larry Summers made about what is innately different in the capabilities of males and females -- that men have a larger standard deviation on many traits, so there are more men at the top and bottom of the bell curves. Archive 2005-02-27
  • They bear bipinnate leaves with small, oval to lanceolate leaflets.
  • Many studies have been done exploring the degree to which birdsong is innate or learned behavior.
  • We occasionally though rarely see something of this kind in plants: thus the embryonic leaves of the ulex or furze, and the first leaves of the phyllodineous acaceas, are pinnate or divided like the ordinary leaves of the leguminosae. On the Origin of Species~ Chapter 13 (historical)
  • The magazine's tony mix of intellect and bohemian chic was the perfect home for Gladwell's innate quirkiness. His obsessive theorizing was no longer weird.
  • -- A tree, 18° high, with leaves opposite, odd-pinnate. The Medicinal Plants of the Philippines
  • If a behavior is innate then some day it will become genetically reprogrammable.
  • Unlike the stereotype of salmon returning unerringly to their natal streams, salmon are innately resilient and opportunistic.
  • We found that many children, even those not much exposed to classical music at home, had an innate interest in it.
  • While liberation from superstition and autocratic oppression is the great legacy of the Enlightenment, to perpetuate the repression of all spiritual expression in the name of reason is to continue to deny our innate being.
  • Here are a few shrubs growing on these shelly heights, viz. Rhamnus frangula, Sideroxilon, Myrica, Zanthoxilon clava Herculis, Juniperus Americana, Lysium salsum; together with several new genera and species of the herbacious and suffruticose tribes, Croton, Stillingia, &c. but particularly a species of Mimosa (Mimosa virgatia) which in respect of the elegancy of its pinnated Travels Through North & South Carolina, Georgia, East & West Florida, the Cherokee Country, the Extensive Territories of the Muscogulges, or Creek Confederacy, and the Country of the Chactaws; Containing An Account of the Soil and Natural Producti
  • All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of every organism to live beyond its income. Samuel Butler 
  • Natural combativeness, an innate immunity to being cowed by the biggest names or the biggest occasions in football, is obviously a vital part of the equipment he carries on to the field.
  • OK, maybe one person in a million has the innate talent, resources and organizational skills to do it.
  • Manners are made up of trivialities of deportment which can be easily learned if one does not happen to know them; manner is personality - the outward manifestation of one's innate character and attitude toward life.
  • She has no friends and, due to her innate tactlessness, appears to lack the capacity to make any.
  • Traditional poetry, with its innate rhythm and alliteration, as well as free verse focusing on social issues, flowed from her pen.
  • He looked in at the door and snickered, then in at the window, then peeked down from between the rafters and cachinnated till his sides must have ached; then struck an attitude upon the chimney, and fairly squealed with mirth and ridicule. In the Catskills Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
  • We have an innate nature, because we have inherited genes from our most successful ancestors.
  • Also, it was nevertheless her Sunday best and, as such, had a certain innate dignity in spite of its nastiness.
  • Leaves are alternate, odd-pinnate with 5-7 unequal-sized leaflets originating from the same rachis. Chapter 22
  • The latter symbolizes that egoistic force of maya (the everyday world) which deludes individuals and keeps them from knowing their innate nature as god.
  • Innate is a word he poorly plays upon: the right word, though less used, is connatural.
  • But, heigho! some fly or other is the indispensable adjunct of every pot of ointment, and while I was still jumping for joy at having passed the steep barrier of such a Rubicon, there came a letter from Miss JESSIMINA which constrained me to cachinnate upon the wrong side of nose! Baboo Jabberjee, B.A.
  • Oliver becomes someone to whom things happen and his innate goodness and innocence palls when he's surrounded by so many more vibrant and colourful characters.
  • Racism is the belief that one race is innately superior to another.
  • He had an innate egalitarianism, a plain-spoken American way of talking, a directness, and a lack of airs.
  • Its curiously and irregularly pinnate fronds are borne on slender stalks, terete toward the base, and covered with reddish brown, downy scales, instead of being produced loosely, as in most other Nephrolepises; these are densily crowded, and the outcome of closely clustered crowns. Scientific American Supplement, No. 447, July 26, 1884
  • His lifelong innate bookishness is barely noticed. Barbara Probst Solomon: Larry Rivers After Crossing His Delaware
  • They were also given vital tips to hone their innate skills, which would help them face the stiff competition.
  • In fact, if posterity decides to remember any of these extravaganzas, it will probably be due more to clever packaging and mixing of media than to any innate musical quality.
  • The radical or innate, is daily supplied by nourishment, which some call cambium, and make those secondary humours of ros and gluten to maintain it: or acquisite, to maintain these four first primary humours, coming and proceeding from the first concoction in the liver, by which means chylus is excluded. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of every organism to live beyond its income. Samuel Butler 
  • Besides its spot-on timeliness, "Outsourced" is a delightful comedy for how it deftly harvests laughs from the inevitable culture clash, from Todd's overeagerness to bridge the gap, and from the innate silliness of the company's product line (whoopee cushions, foam fingers and the like). 2010 Fall TV Lineup: 10 New Shows Worth Checking Out
  • It includes innate male aggression and, as recognised by some ethologists, an emphasis on instinctive territoriality.
  • I assure you it has nothing to do with bravery, or some innate motivation to break the big story.
  • Defensive mechanisms based upon germline - encoded receptors constitute a system of innate immunity.
  • Her innate charm even at her age and her adeptness at being able to turn a situation, howsoever desperate, in her favour, catapult her from the degrading depths of poverty into a fairly comfortable Brahmin priestess.
  • To say something does not exist simply on the grounds that you can not ‘see’ it is enough to make anyone cachinnate.
  • He understood our innate need for rest and decompression, which is why He offered to provide His followers with a place of spiritual refuge when He said, Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest. TEXAS FAITH: What do your spiritual paths say about the role of play? | RELIGION Blog | dallasnews.com
  • What moves men and women to love others is the innate goodness that they know is in each and every one of us.
  • Arrangement of septa in earliest stages pinnate in all quadrants.
  • Coupled with a sincere belief in her innate cooking sense, this lack resulted in some spectacularly ghastly meals.
  • But could those early storytellers have actually been feeling their way around the idea of orthogenesis, i.e., spontaneous birth, where life has the innate ability to move linearly? ScreenTalk
  • That innate shallow streak of mine can be a godsend at times.
  • Attention must leave tennis, and had made an innate reflex nerve more agile.
  • Early research has defined leadership in terms of innate individual traits: some people are somehow born with an inborn quality to lead.
  • Miner, "who advises me to" do the right thing by M'liss, "or intimates somewhat obscurely that he will" bust my crust for me, "which, though complimentary in its abstract expression of interest, and implying a taste for euphonism, evinces an innate coarseness which I fear may blunt his perceptions of delicate shades and Greek outlines. The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Tales With Condensed Novels, Spanish and American Legends, and Earlier Papers
  • We occasionally though rarely see something of the same kind in plants; thus the first leaves of the ulex or furze, and the first leaves of the phyllodineous æacias, are pinnate or divided like the ordinary leaves of the Leguminosæ. XIV. Mutual Affinities of Organic Beings: Morphology-Embryology-Rudimentary Organs. Development and Embryology
  • For all that Netanyahu's innate arrogance and self-aggrandisement was laid bare by the contents of the nine-year-old recording, the collective shrugging of shoulders implies that few expected anything else from a man who has been boasting of his own political prowess throughout his tumultuous career. Why Binyamin Netanyahu tape is no real shocker
  • An innate horror at the sight of a naked sword averted him from the most just of wars; while his favourite Buckingham practised on his weakness, and his own complacent vanity rendered him an easy dupe of The Thirty Years War — Complete
  • Nonetheless, there are clear differences between models of the mind with empiricist leanings and models of the mind with nativist leanings, and the notion of innateness may be thought to earn its usefulness by marking these differences. Concepts
  • Most properly bred gun dogs have the innate ability and drive to excede there master's qualifications for training. Still Waiting on Your Gun Dog of a Lifetime?
  • Director Bob Baker seems to have an innate understanding of the Coward paradox, that wistful vitriol.
  • Innate immune mechanisms may also be important in preventing infections that have a nidus in the oral cavity.
  • The whole idea of a last meal is oxymoronic: eating is innately optimistic, a vote for the future. Times, Sunday Times
  • It differs from it, however, by being twice pinnate below, and from the typical spinulose fern by its glandular indusium; but from the intermediate variety it is more difficult to separate it, as that also has indusiate glands. The Fern Lover's Companion A Guide for the Northeastern States and Canada
  • Developmental psychobiologists reject a basic idea at the heart of much discussion of innateness, which is that evolution makes development reliable by making it insensitive to environmental parameters. The Distinction Between Innate and Acquired Characteristics
  • a pinnately compound leaf
  • Free to adhere to or reject what is known, human beings cannot be coerced by attempted external pressure or used as a means by others without prejudice to the inviolable truth in which they share innately through their participation in the light of being and which they attain adventitiously through the direct perception that unfolds determined truths to their intellectual gaze. Antonio Rosmini
  • Americans have an innate sense of fairness.
  • Packing was an occupation that rewarded innate qualities and paid little regard to status or civility.
  • It is the novelist's innate cowardice that makes him depute to imaginary personalities the sins that he is too cautious to commit for himself. Where's the show?
  • Fronds oblong-lanceolate, five to twelve inches long, twice pinnate, the pinnæ often pinnatifid or cut-toothed, ovate-lanceolate, decurrent on the winged rachis. The Fern Lover's Companion A Guide for the Northeastern States and Canada
  • This certainly calls the learnability and innateness hypotheses into question. Archive 2004-12-01
  • This led to their conclusion that odors associated with toxicity, like warning colors, can have a special intrinsic warning value and trigger innate aversions.
  • Imagination could never invent the number of different contradictions that exist innately in each person's heart. Francois de La Rochefoucauld 
  • Racism is the belief that one race is innately superior to another.
  • No amount of scientific progress, moreover, has separated the world from our apprehension of its innate destiny.
  • Traditional poetry, with its innate rhythm and alliteration, as well as free verse focusing on social issues, flowed from her pen.
  • To the right, it becomes innately benevolent, permeated by numina, a romantic meadow of Thinning; its aesthetic is idyllic. A Theory of Modes and Modalities
  • So he's releasing a bevy of albums of late, and I shan't cachinnate nor chortle at this dispatch.
  • Chomsky explains this phenomenon by suggesting that human individuals are innately endowed with a deep structure grammar of language.
  • They produced several types of foliage all characterized by pinnate leaves with open dichotomous venation.
  • It can lead to the creation of entirely new forms of social structure -- the coffee house or the commune -- but these have to be adopted by individuals, consolidated into subcultures, and able to survive a reactionary mainstream that is innately antagonistic to subcultures of alternativity. More Aesthetics
  • What they do and how they behave is irrelevant, when compared to the dues they believe are owed their innate sense of self-worth. On Jane Austen « Tales from the Reading Room
  • Innateness is about the extent to which the brain is prewired, plasticity about the extent to which it can be rewired.
  • I saw a wrong and I wanted to right it; it's just a basic innate instinct to me.
  • Also a new DODONOEA, with very narrow, linear, pinnated leaves. Journal of an Expedition into the Interior of Tropical Australia
  • Is there, then, any explanation of that vision more rational than that the spirit thus closely affined with my own was enabled, through its innate potencies, or through some agency of which we are ignorant, to impress upon my bodily perceptions its uncontrollable emotions? The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 57, July, 1862
  • The lower leaves, with very short, sheathing footstalks, are large and spreading, reaching more than a foot in length, broadly triangular in outline and tripinnate.
  • An innate sense of pride and dignity sets them apart from the crowd.
  • No trait is innate in itself, but “certain parts of the information which underly the adaptedness of the whole, and which can be ascertained by the deprivation experiment, are indeed innate” (Lorenz 1965, 40). The Distinction Between Innate and Acquired Characteristics
  • The stems may be simple or branched, in the large types reaching as much as I m in height; the basal leaves are long, often pinnately lobed and coarsely toothed, but sometimes are not serrated, while the cauline leaves are simple and linear. Chapter 27
  • Human beings are going to resist cultural dictates that are too inconsistent with their innate desires.
  • The importance of innate immune mechanisms in controlling viral infections, cancer and autoimmunity is currently an area of intense research.
  • Europa achieves ecstatic permanence in phosphorescence, which originates only due to light from another source, just as myth propagates itself: by tapping into innate human eros.
  • Kraepelin rejected the psychoanalytical theories that placed innate sexuality or early sexual experiences at the root of mental illness.
  • The loss of Robert had awoken her to the innate treachery of all certainties. MR GOLIGHTLY'S HOLIDAY
  • remembered her history rightly, known for its innate dweomer talent. A TIME OF WAR
  • Their innate modesty is expressed in their alternative names - rissoles, patties, faggots - and a complete absence of trend-setting ingredients such as mizuna, enoki, frog's legs and mascarpone.
  • All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of every organism to live beyond its income. Samuel Butler 
  • It includes innate male aggression and, as recognised by some ethologists, an emphasis on instinctive territoriality.
  • The quassia tree grows from 50 to 100 feet high; it has smooth, gray bark and alternate, odd-pinnate leaves with oblong, pointed leaflets. Its small flowers are yellowish or greenish, its fruit is a small rupe about the size of a pea.
  • In addition to education in specific areas of interest, one should also have a strong innate passion and interest for the profession.
  • The plant has 45 cm high clustered leafy stems with pinnately arranged pale green lance-shaped leaflets obliquely banded with pure white.
  • Most psychologists would grant that some basic perceptual primitives - for example, color, sound, and depth - are derived from the physical world by dedicated innate mechanisms in the mind.
  • She has no friends and, due to her innate tactlessness, appears to lack the capacity to make any.
  • It is innately populist in its focus on commerciality and innately elitist in its focus on conceptuality. Archive 2007-02-01
  • His Holiness explains the seed of bodhicitta, which is the biologically innate compassion (the love that binds social animals together); aspects of attachment and aversion required for biological survival; and tantric meditations that take anger (but not ill will) into the path. Nagarjuna's Bodhichitta Commentary
  • The cultural anthropologist Edward T Hall, who was in that circle, and studied what he called the silent languages of time and space, once pointed out to me that our most significant, most critical inventions were not those ever considered to be inventions, but those that appeared to be innate and natural. John Brockman: the man who runs the world's smartest website
  • So that class of women known as facile is unknown to me, or if I allow myself to be taken with them, it is without knowing it, and through innate simplicity. The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • This position, supported under the P30 mechanism, is designed to attract appropriately trained postdoctoral fellows or junior investigators (no previous tenure track appointment) to explore one or more of the following research areas: (1) interplay of innate/adaptive immune systems and bioflims, possibly using germfree/gnotobiotic models; (2) mucosal vaccinology; or (3) autoimmunity. Naturejobs - All Jobs
  • This kind of innateness has become the established wisdom in cognitive science. NYT > Home Page
  • The lower pinnæ pinnately parted into three to five divisions, those of the fertile fronds oblong or linear-oblong; those of the sterile, obovate or ovate, crenulate, decurrent at the base. The Fern Lover's Companion A Guide for the Northeastern States and Canada
  • I chuckled, guffawed, chortled and cachinnated my way through the book.
  • -- The "pterocarpus," L., is a tree of the first order with odd-pinnate leaves. The Medicinal Plants of the Philippines
  • Both inflammatory and antiinflammatory responses were attenuated, whereas the innate cell function of granulocytes and monocytes was preserved.
  • What is innate and unfolds from inside of us is pushed onto some great godlike figure of the past whose legacy is tightly held in the keep of the institution and its hierarchy in the form of a creed or orthodoxy that is sacrosanct.
  • History tells us that no matter how technologically advanced an invader is the people of Afghanistan always unite and prevail to fight each other another day while the Pakistanis in the NWP are Pashstun who are ethnically tied to a group of the Afghanistan people and probably possess their innate hatred of ferangi in their country. They’re In Control | ATTACKERMAN
  • The use of the French reflexive in the present indicative stresses the innate auto-referentiality of his narrative.
  • In the first stage, the innate, initial impulse of a living organism, plant, or animal is self-love and not pleasure, as the rival Epicureans contend.
  • All of these foliage forms are planate pinnate fronds, frequently with open venation.
  • Hobbling on a broomstick, with, no doubt, the same weird, wizened face as now, an innate sense of the fitness of things must have suggested the kerchief tied around her big head, and the burlaps rag of an apron in front of her linsey-woolsey rag of a gown, and the bit of broken pipe-stem in the corner of her mouth, where the pipe should have been, and where it was in after years. Balcony Stories
  • And perhaps from yoga, or more likely from an innate lack of ligaments, he has acquired the flexibility of a contortionist.
  • All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of every organism to live beyond its income. Samuel Butler 
  • I've talked about the effect that story had on my life in my blogs before, but, though it couldn't be called a happy, queer-romantic story by any means, I had my head blown off by the concept that gender roles/expectatoins, etc. are often projected, rather than innate (ie as in how one of the main characters thinks about the "lovebirds" until their same sex-ness is revealed.) Day in the Life of an Idiot
  • Home ownership has been an overarching and innate desire of the British.
  • (Sydney) are collecting data about scientists 'use of the notion of innateness in several disciplines. The LINGUIST List: MostRecent
  • [The one with singularly thick, firm, and rigid leaves, a foot long, linear attenuated at each extremity, pubescenti-sericeous, striated: the other with white acerose leaves pinnated in two pairs. Journal of an Expedition into the Interior of Tropical Australia
  • If a gold medal is had, it will be because of the dominance of Tim, the innate and unteachable understanding of the game by Carmelo, and because someone gets hot with their perimeter shooting.
  • We occasionally though rarely see something of this kind in plants: thus the embryonic leaves of the ulex or furze, and the first leaves of the phyllodineous acaceas, are pinnate or divided like the ordinary leaves of the leguminosæ. On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. (2nd edition)
  • “You are not a real man because you cannot attract The Ladies with your innate sexual virility/status/wealth etc” to go along with the “you are a bad lady because you do not believe chastity is the cardinal female virtue.” Relevancy of Client Status « Bound, Not Gagged
  • In our country, we seem to have an innate resistance to thinking of business as a route to wealth or status.
  • Editor's Note -- I will not allow my innate anti-Tennessee demeanor to improperly effect my thoughts on the upcoming "Titanic struggle" (apologies to Marty B.) between the good guys, and the understandably "unliked" Tennessee Volunteers. A Sea Of Blue
  • She had an innate sense of compassion which reached out to the wider community and her ready smile radiated a warm welcome which endeared her to so many.
  • Rats have evolved a strong, innate aversion to the smells of their predators.
  • The generic appellations of the several species of Ferns are derived thus: _Aspidium_, from _aspis_, a shield, because the spores are enclosed in bosses; _Pteris_, from _pteerux_, a wing, having doubly pinnate fronds; or from _pteron_, a feather, having feathery fronds; Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
  • The reader not only has a thorough overview of the arguments for innateness based on linguistic analyses of syntactic structures, but the issue is reworked from several other angles as well.
  • But first an explanation to concinnate my narrative. The Holy Cross and Other Tales
  • I believe in the moral integrity of human beings, and that it is innate, is irreducible, and cannot be spoken about too much or too often.
  • Most Australian species of Acacia have bipinnate leaves, as least when they are in the seedling stage.
  • An implicit appeal to eugenics persuades the reader that the innate badness of the suicidal killer can be known just by looking.
  • Schistosoma mansoni (a platyhelminth) [17] Phylogenetic comparisons of putative Hirudo innate immune response genes present within the Hirudo transcriptome database herein described show a strong resemblance to the corresponding mammalian genes, indicating that this important physiological response may have older origins than what has been previously proposed. BioMed Central - Latest articles
  • He relied on his own innate genius in his lifelong quest to uncover the marvels of Nature.
  • The laws which excuse, on any occasions, the ignorance of their subjects, confess their own imperfections: the civil jurisprudence, as it was abridged by Justinian, still continued a mysterious science, and a profitable trade, and the innate perplexity of the study was involved in tenfold darkness by the private industry of the practitioners. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Metrical speech not only produces some heightened form of attention that increases mnemonic retention; it also seems to provide innate physical pleasure in both the auditor and orator.
  • The other thing that crops up in far to much SF for my liking is "psionics", and especially breeds of people who have an innate talent for it. Again With The Future Is Here!
  • It is distinguished by its phenology, whitish twigs and paired thorns. blue green bipinnate leaves lacking a petiolar gland, but with glands between nearly all its 2-12 pinnate pairs. Chapter 33
  • They are both innately skilled, whether working metal with a hammer and anvil or wood with a carving tool.
  • The bright green bipinnate leaves are up to 15 cm long.
  • Empiricists may look to the historical connection between Spain and the Netherlands, but in this case, my money's on innateness.
  • remembered her history rightly, known for its innate dweomer talent. A TIME OF WAR
  • Sure, there were a few clunkers in their discography, but one couldn't deny their innate ability to craft such dark, soulful, rock songs.
  • All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of every organism to live beyond its income. Samuel Butler 
  • And thus ended what, little as they knew it, was to be the last of their many confidential talks on the subject of Richard, his frowardness and crabbedness, his innate inability to fit himself to life. Ultima Thule
  • Emotion is the innate weakness of human.
  • Natural combativeness, an innate immunity to being cowed by the biggest names or the biggest occasions in football, is obviously a vital part of the equipment he carries on to the field.
  • For example, humans certainly seem to have an innate facility with the concepts of numbers, with mental representations of the idea of animate agents, with the concept that the world is composed (in some way) of discrete objects, etc. 3quarksdaily
  • In this article I especially emphasize Siwutang's use in gynecoiatry and stress the basic principle of females using livers as innateness .
  • Metrical speech not only produces some heightened form of attention that increases mnemonic retention; it also seems to provide innate physical pleasure in both the auditor and orator.
  • Children have no innate fear of water and must be carefully supervised.
  • About 25 years ago, the Harvard biologist E. O. Wilson popularized the "biophilia" hypothesis: the idea that our evolutionary history has blessed us with an innate affinity for living things.
  • Payne and Payne found no evidence that indigo buntings had an inherited tendency to disperse, but migratory direction seems to be innate for juveniles.
  • Main contention is that ‘Art’: its creation and appreciation, are innate; that these activities are universally human, that they developed as part of a survival mechanism. Storytelling as low risk experience…key to Survival
  • Now if Obama turns into Jimmy Carter and craters, which is just as likely given the built up pork demands of the Democratic Party and its innate pacifism, then she can run as the Avenging Angel and win in 2012. Dana Milbank would like Sarah Palin to stop fighting and accept defeat graciously.
  • It is distinguished by its phonology, whitish twigs and paired thorns, blue green bipinnate leaves lacking a petiolar gland, but with glands between nearly all its 2-12 pinnate pairs. Chapter 10
  • Mr. Muti never stinted on visceral excitement — a hallmark of the five-part symphony's last two movements — but it was his supreme control of dynamics, pacing and overall architecture that most thrilled, true even when his innate dramatic impulses caused him to lunge or drop nearly to his knees on the podium. Muti and Chicago Rekindle the Flame
  • Fronds eight to eighteen inches long, lanceolate-oblong, tripinnate. The Fern Lover's Companion A Guide for the Northeastern States and Canada
  • For better than half the worlds population that had been mired in the muck of socialism for half a century and several millennium of feudal slavery before that, to suddenly break free and to begin to realize some of their innate potentials as human beings is truly one of the great events in human history. Coyote Blog » Blog Archive » Thought for the Day
  • All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of every organism to live beyond its income. Samuel Butler 
  • Rousseau contrasted the disease of amour-propre with the healthy amour-de-soi, a love of self which motivates a man to protect himself and his life without really caring how others see him (but still acting with pity and compassion, which Rousseau considered innate). Ashley Rindsberg: Mr. President, You Are Sick With Self Love
  • The denial of an innate and privileged character of the Adamic language does not, however, mean denial of the doctrine of the monogenesis of languages. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • Those sentiments of love, which fathers and mothers have for their children -- those feelings of affection, which children, with good inclinations, bear towards their parents, are by no means _innate sentiments_; they are nothing more, than the effect of experience, of reflection, of habit, in souls of sensibility. The System of Nature, Volume 1
  • - The stem of the 2nd is procumbent abot the size of the former, jointed and unbranched. it's leaves are cauline, compound and oppositely pinnate; the rib from 14 to 16 inches long celindric and smooth. the leafets The Journals of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1806
  • Not surprisingly, there are laughs to be had; wrestlers are, of course, innately absurd figures.
  • As a writer who since my teenaged days has had one foot in the Spanish world, that is, Spain, whose art, architecture and writing, has always included multiple highways and byways -- an innate baroqueness -- I am used to this muchness. Barbara Probst Solomon: Larry Rivers After Crossing His Delaware
  • The need to satisfy the sense of taste may be innate and important.
  • He seems to possess some innate badness of character and fondness for low company.
  • Having been brought up in a religious household myself, I have an innate sense of admiration for those people who have faith in an increasingly faithless world.
  • We were making an entry of somebody's chickens at a store door in the village just mentioned, one August day, when a familiar "hillo!" reached our ear, and turning round, we perceived, some twenty yards off, the quizzical face of our old friend, projecting over the fore-gate of his wagon, and puckered into five hundred little wrinkles as he cachinnated joyously -- Some Adventures of Captain Simon Suggs, Late of the Tallapoosa Volunteers; Together with "Taking the Census," and Other Alabama Sketches. By a Country Editor. With a Portrait from Life, and Other Illustrations, by Darley
  • Yet, even in those who are rudderless and "planless," I see the beautiful and innate joy of life (the joie de vivre) which God has implanted in all human beings. Catholic Analysis
  • Information on leaf yield of African bipinnate Acacia spp. is limited, and comparative data with introduced Australian species, even more so. Chapter 2
  • I don't believe that human beings are innately evil.
  • Meditation allows us to relinquish our worries and anxieties and awaken our innate energy and creativity.
  • The sago tree is a palm, thicker and larger than the cocoa-nut tree, although rarely so tall, and having immense pinnate spiny leaves, which completely cover the trunk till it is many years old. The Malay Archipelago
  • Like their contemporaries in the press, the schoolroom, and elsewhere, literary writers helped to construct Irish-Americans as innately depraved.
  • In reality, plasticity and innateness are almost logically separate.
  • _campo_, on the higher and drier ground, are seen palms of other and different species, both fan-leaved and pinnate, growing in copses or larger "montes," with evergreen shrubs and trees of deciduous foliage interspersed. Gaspar the Gaucho A Story of the Gran Chaco
  • The most common elements are parallel-veined leaves that resemble cordaites but that could be isolated pinnules of a pinnate leaf.
  • Twice or thrice pinnate leaves, toothed like a tenon saw, with conspicuous veins ending in the notches, brand it as the beaver poison, otherwise known as the musquash root and spotted cowbane. Some Summer Days in Iowa
  • Discernable guy cypriot off guys business at home desired off enwrapped astatine maintenance agitative pyrogenetic boys preclusive off cum hot paripinnate. Rational Review
  • The small firn also rises with a common footstalk from the radix and are from four to eight in number. about 8 inches long; the central rib marked with a slight longitudinal groove throughout it's whole length. the leafets are oppositely pinnate about 1/3 rd of the length of the common footstalk from the bottom and thence alternately pinnate; the footstalk terminating in a simple undivided nearly entire lanceolate leafet. the leafets are oblong, obtuse, convex absolutely entire, marked on the upper disk with a slight longitudinal groove in place of the central rib, smooth and of a deep green. near the upper extremity these leafets are decursively pinnate as are also those of the large f rn. The Journals of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1806
  • No clear solution presents itself at the present, only that the survival and radiation pattern could not have followed from the traditional view that it was all a simple matter of some innate dinosaurian "superiority" and competition. "Hallways...always..."
  • The colonies are erect, typically delicate; reticulate (net-like) or pinnate (fern-like).
  • That capacity is not innate to them: it must be socialized into them by educational institutions.
  • Fronds pale green, one to six feet high; sterile part bipinnate, each pinna having numerous pairs of lance-oblong, serrulate pinnules alternate along the midrib. The Fern Lover's Companion A Guide for the Northeastern States and Canada
  • This overnutrition is a threat to our survival and it stimulates an innate immune response because that's the only response we have. Inflammation and diet | The Blog of Michael R. Eades, M.D.
  • The body possesses an innate tendency to reject and destroy any foreign material introduced into it.
  • Apparently he likes to maintain the illusion that there is some great political cunning at work, that his selections reveal his innate ability to foresee problems and win seats.
  • Indeed, the whole point of my theorisation of strange fiction is largely to develop a vocabulary through which the incredibility junkies can reclaim the field as an innately diverse territory of aesthetic forms. More Aesthetics
  • the driving force was his innate enthusiasm

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